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Tuesday, 7 June 2016

Mustapha Kamil : “There are specific instructions to use this or that story, and we’re not allowed to question,”

The Wall Street Journal

Mustapha Kamil, the former group editor of Malaysia’s English-language New Straits Times.
Photo:
Mustapha Kamil

By

Tom Wright

Updated June 6, 2016 5:29 a.m. ET

A senior Malaysian journalist who quit his job at a leading newspaper said Prime Minister Najib Razak’s government has cracked down on freedom of speech as it tries to limit the fallout from a graft scandal surrounding a state investment fund.

Mustapha
Kamil, the former group editor of the English-language New Straits
Times, which is controlled by Mr. Najib’s ruling party, took a rare
public stance by saying that an increasingly “authoritarian” stand by
the government toward media was the reason he quit the newspaper in
April. He had worked there for more than a quarter-century.

Mr. Mustapha initially remained quiet after stepping down, but last week posted the reasons for his action on his Facebook page—an unusual act in the closed world of Malaysian state media.

A journalist’s responsibility is “first to the truth,” Mr. Mustapha wrote.

Investigators
in at least seven countries are probing 1Malaysia Development Bhd., or
1MDB, a government investment fund Mr. Najib set up in 2009 to boost
growth. Some investigators have said they believe $6 billion has gone
missing.

Mr.
Najib’s government has banned newspapers it controls—which include the
New Straits Times and the larger-circulation Malay-language Berita
Harian and Utusan Malaysia newspapers—from covering the 1MDB story, Mr.
Mustapha said in an interview.

News releases from 1MDB denying stories in the Journal and calling
into question its sources would sometimes come to the New Straits Times
from the prime minister’s office with orders to run the statements in
their entirety, according to Mr. Mustapha. The newspaper did as they
were told.

“There are specific instructions to use this or that
story, and we’re not allowed to question,” he said. “Before 1MDB, there
was more freedom for us to do our job.”

Mr. Najib and the 1MDB
fund didn’t respond to questions about whether the government pressured
media over coverage of the scandal. In the past, Malaysia’s government
has justified curbing media freedom to report on 1MDB, citing the need
to maintain public order.

Mr. Mustapha acknowledged that the New Straits Times, which is controlled by Media Prima Bhd., a company owned by Mr. Najib’s ruling United Malays National Organization, always faced some curbs on free expression.

Those
limits, though, have narrowed considerably in the past year since Mr.
Najib began to fight allegations about taking money from 1MDB, he added.

“It was not this frequent and not this authoritarian,” Mr. Mustapha said of previous media controls.

James Chin,
a Malaysian academic who heads the Asia Institute at the University of
Tasmania, disagrees that the level of pressure on state-run media from
the government has increased under Mr. Najib. He said the government of
former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad regularly closed newspapers.

But
the 1MDB scandal has rolled on for so long—hurting the ruling party’s
image—that it is starting to cause fissures between Mr. Najib and
editors from newspapers that should support him, Mr. Chin said.

Some
independent news outlets, like the Edge Media Group, have also faced
pressure from Mr. Najib’s administration after reporting critically
about the 1MDB scandal. Last year, the government said it suspended The
Edge Weekly and The Edge Financial Daily for two months due to the
company’s reporting on the scandal. The Malaysian Insider, another
online news site owned by the Edge group, said it was blocked by the
government in March and decided to shut down amid falling advertising
revenue.

Mr. Najib’s administration has cracked down on criticism
of 1MDB in other ways. Last year, a former ruling-party politician was
arrested on charges of economic sabotage after he called for an
investigation into 1MDB. He was later released on bail.

Mr.
Mustapha said on Facebook that the Pulitzer Prize committee’s decision
in April to cite The Wall Street Journal as a finalist in international
reporting for its coverage of 1MDB was a factor in his decision.

“When
an American newspaper…wrote a story that got nominated for the coveted
Pulitzer Prize, about an issue that happened right under my nose, I
began to seriously search my conscience and asked myself why I was in
journalism in the first place,” he said.